"Tohono O'odham Fiddle Music"
Contributed by Barbara E. Sherrill and Susan Gage
MUS334 Professor Sturman
September 30, 2002
Tohono O'odham fiddle music is a unique and distinctive musical tradition
heard in Southern Arizona. The O'odham people, formerly known as the
Papago and Pima tribes. The Tohono O'odham nation includes the desert
and the river territory stretching from Phoenix, Arizona to the Mexican
border. The word O'odham means "people" in the indigenous
language spoken throughout South Central Arizona and small pockets of
Sonora and Durango, Mexico. The traditional O'odham fiddle music band
consists of two violins, one or more guitars and a bass and snare drum.
The tunes are usually not named, but can be identified by humming a
few bars of music.
O'odham fiddle music was a result of the arrival and influence of European
missionaries, which began in 1539. It continued with the arrival of
Father Kino in 1687 as a Catholic missionary for the Court of Spain.
This was the beginning influence of Catholicism, its masses, rituals
and a global world connection for the Tohono O'odham communities. By
1915 the Franciscan missionaries arrived and continued the influences
of Father Kino and others with the O'odham communities. The O'odham
communities developed a kind of "folk Catholicism", that allowed
them to retain some of their old, pre-Catholic traditions. One of their
most important traditions is the holding of village saint's day feasts.
These feasts included praying, marching in processions, feasting on
special foods, and couple-dancing to European-style music, or O'odham
old style fiddle music. The music and feast goes on all night long until
dawn. Different tunes are played in the early evening, after midnight
and early morning. The instruments are usually retuned to a different
pitch after midnight.
The Jesuit and Franciscan missionaries taught their European instruments
to the Tohono O'odham communities so they could play music for Catholic
masses and other Church occasions. The San Xavier community south of
Tucson probably had such instruments. It is believed that the American
49'ers traveled through the San Xavier community. This is probably where
the Tohono O'odham learned the polka, mazurka, waltz and schottische
dance music. These dances became the primary forms for the traditional
Tohono O'odham fiddle music, transforming the music for church to secular
purposes. Written records indicate that by the 1860's, an O'odham band
of fiddles and guitars played at Tucson's annual Fiesta de San Agustin.
This traditional fiddle music was used until after the Second World
War, when it was replaced with the modern day waila band.
Three traditional dances are performed to the old style Tohono O'odham
fiddle music. The kwariya is a circle dance in which couples
promenade, reverse direction, do a grand chain, and then form into two-couple
sets for well-known Anglo-American square dance figures. The couples
exit by promenading under a bridge of hands. The music is played in
6/8 time. A special kwariya tune is known from Eastern Europe to Arizona
as "Flop-Eared Mule." The other two dance types, the Pascola
and the Matachine dances, are strictly associated with religious ritual.
The Pascola dance was traditionally taken from the Yaqui Indians, but
with a heavy Christian influence by European missionaries. The music
that accompanies matachines dances dates back to medieval Spain.
Since the mid 1980's traditional O'odham old style fiddle band has
enjoyed a revival of interest. Veteran musicians have formed three bands
that currently perform waila fiddle music: the San Xavier Fiddle band,
the Gu Achi Fiddlers, and the Gila River Fiddlers. Each band represents
a different region of the Tohono O'odham nation. All three bands have
produced recordings.
To purchase Tohono O'odham fiddle music, visit these websites:
http://www.canyonrecords.com
http://www.larksham.com
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Lornell, Kip, Anne K. Rasmussen. Waila: The social Dane of the Tohono,
in Musics of Multicultural America: A Study of Twelve Communities.
New York: Schirmer Books, 1997: 187-297.
Lornell, Kip. "Ethnic and Native American traditions," in
Introducing American Folk Music: Ethnic and Grassroot Traditions
in the United States. New York: McGraw-Hill, 2002: 226-30.